Songwriting done behind bars

Annah Mac used last year’s lockdown to make a CD (below) featuring the musical talent of...
Annah Mac used last year’s lockdown to make a CD (below) featuring the musical talent of prisoners she had tutored. PHOTO: ODT FILES
Annah Mac has spent five years creating harmony in the region’s prisons.

Almost a decade since the release of her debut album, the Southland-born musician was recognised for her work as tutor of The Kowhai Project, an immensely successful rehabilitative programme for inmates at Otago Correction Facility (OCF).

The Kowhai Project
The Kowhai Project
Mac was highly commended by judges for Te Putanga Toi Arts Access Award, which were presented at Te Papa last night.

She said the recognition was a chance to celebrate the progress made since the project’s inception, which she said would not have been possible without the backing of Corrections or the buy-in of prisoners.

While jail protocol and the lingo used by those inside took some getting used to, Mac said it had been rewarding work.

“It feels a bit like home sometimes,” she said.

“I get so comfortable I have to remind myself it is a prison.”

The Kowhai Project is a 10-week programme, roughly half of which is made up songwriting, a quarter devoted to the ukulele and quarter to singing.

The intense final four weeks is spent recording songs using her mobile studio.

Mac also runs a condensed version at Invercargill Prison a couple of times a year.

“I try to keep music as something you can use, as a way to work through things or make fun of things,” she said.

Not even the Covid-19 lockdown was enough to stop her.

Mac used the time away to compile a CD of 37 songs that had been recorded by those under her tutelage, which was released in March.

OCF learning and interventions delivery manager Sherie Lucke said the course had been a valuable rehabilitative tool.

“Men on the programme go well outside their comfort zone. The skills and confidence participants develop is amazing, and usually no-one is more amazed by what they have achieved than the men themselves.”

rob.kidd@odt.co.nz

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